A multi-wavelength photonic oscillator has a plurality of lasers each emitting light at a different frequency. An optical wavelength multiplexer combines the light emitted by the plurality of lasers at an output thereof as a set of optical wavelengths. An optical modulator is arranged in a feedback loop and coupled to receive light at the output of the optical wavelength multiplexer, the feedback loop further including an optical tap for coupling at least a subset of said set of optical wavelengths to at least one optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic modulator; at least one optical channel having an associated photodetector arranged to receive light from the optical tap via the at least one optical channel; and an electronic loop portion coupled to receive output from the at least one associated photodetector and to provide an input for the optical modulator.
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1. A multi-wavelength photonic oscillator comprising:
(a) a plurality of lasers each emitting light at a different frequency;
(b) an optical wavelength multiplexer for combining the light emitted by the plurality of lasers at an output thereof as a set of optical wavelengths; and
(c) an optical modulator arranged in a feedback loop and coupled to receive light at the output of the optical wavelength multiplexer, the feedback loop having a loop gain greater than unity and including:
(i) an optical tap for coupling at least a subset of said set of optical wavelengths to at least one optical output of said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator;
(ii) at least one optical channel having an associated photodetector arranged to receive light from the optical tap via the at least one optical channel; and
(iii) an electronic loop portion coupled to receive output from the at least one associated photodetector and to provide an input for the optical modulator.
30. A receiver comprising:
(a) optical modulators for modulating optical local oscillator signals;
(b) photodetectors coupled to outputs of the optical modulators for converting the modulated optical local oscillator signals to an electrical intermediate frequency or baseband signal for subsequent processing; and
(c) an apparatus for generating the optical local oscillator signals comprising:
(i) multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator producing an optical output comprising multiple optical carriers and multiple modulation sidebands, said multiple optical carriers and multiple modulation sidebands being grouped into more than one wavelength region with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband; and
(ii) a wavelength division demultiplexer coupled to receive the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said wavelength division demultiplexer separating the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator into more than one of said wavelength regions, with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband, the output at each wavelength region being suitable for determining a local oscillator frequency.
24. A transmitter comprising:
(a) optical modulators for modulating optical local oscillator signals;
(b) photodetectors coupled to outputs of the optical modulators for converting the modulated optical local oscillator signals to electrical radio frequency signals for subsequent application to antenna elements; and
(c) an apparatus for generating the optical local oscillator signals comprising:
(i) multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator producing an optical output comprising multiple optical carriers and multiple modulation sidebands, said multiple optical carriers and multiple modulation sidebands being grouped into more than one wavelength region with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband; and
(ii) a wavelength division demultiplexer coupled to receive the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said wavelength division demultiplexer separating the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator into more than one of said wavelength regions, with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband, the output at each wavelength region being suitable for determining a local oscillator frequency.
26. A transmitter comprising:
(a) optical modulators for modulating optical local oscillator signals;
(b) photodetectors coupled to outputs of the optical modulators for converting the modulated optical local oscillator signals to electrical radio frequency signals for subsequent application to antenna elements; and
(c) an apparatus for generating the optical local oscillator signals comprising:
(i) multi-wavelength photonic oscillator;
(ii) a wavelength division demultiplexer coupled to an optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said wavelength division demultiplexer separating the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator into more than one wavelength region, with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband, the output at each wavelength region being suitable for determining a local oscillator frequency; and
(iii) a plurality of slave lasers arranged as pairs of slave lasers, each pair of slave lasers being wavelength-associated with a particular wavelength region of said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator and being coupled to said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator via said wavelength division demultiplexer, and wherein one slave laser in each said pair of slave lasers is set so that its free-running wavelength matches a modulation sideband in an optical signal supplied by the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator.
32. A receiver comprising:
(a) optical modulators for modulating optical local oscillator signals;
(b) photodetectors coupled to outputs of the optical modulators for converting the modulated optical local oscillator signals to an electrical intermediate frequency or baseband signal for subsequent processing; and
(c) an apparatus for generating the optical local oscillator signals comprising:
(i) multi-wavelength photonic oscillator; and
(ii) a wavelength division demultiplexer coupled to an optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator, said wavelength division demultiplexer separating the optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator into more than one wavelength region, with the optical output at each wavelength region comprising at least an optical carrier and a modulation sideband, the output at each wavelength region being suitable for determining a local oscillator frequency; and
(iii) a plurality of slave lasers arranged as pairs of slave lasers, each pair of slave lasers being wavelength-associated with a particular wavelength region of said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator and being coupled to said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator via said wavelength division demultiplexer, and wherein one slave laser in each said pair of slave lasers is set so that its free-running wavelength matches a modulation sideband in an optical signal supplied by the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator.
2. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
3. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
4. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
5. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
6. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
7. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
8. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
9. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
10. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
11. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
12. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
13. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
14. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
15. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
16. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
17. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
18. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
(d) a wavelength division demultiplexer coupled to the at least one optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic oscillator; and
(e) a plurality of slave lasers arranged as pairs of slave lasers, each pair of slave lasers being wavelength-associated with a laser of said plurality of lasers in said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator and being coupled to said multi-wavelength photonic oscillator via said wavelength division demultiplexer.
19. The apparatus of
20. The apparatus of
21. The apparatus of
22. The apparatus of
23. The apparatus of
25. The transmitter of
27. The transmitter of
28. The transmitter of
29. The transmitter of
(1) a plurality of lasers each emitting light at a different frequency;
(2) an optical wavelength multiplexer for combining the light emitted by the plurality of lasers at an output thereof as a set of optical wavelengths; and
(3) an optical modulator arranged in a feedback loop and coupled to receive light at the output of the optical wavelength multiplexer, the feedback loop further including: an optical tap for coupling at least a subset of said set of optical wavelengths to at least one optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic modulator; at least one optical channel having an associated photodetector arranged to receive light from the optical tap via the at least one optical channel; and an electronic loop portion coupled to receive output from the at least one associated photodetector and to provide an input for the optical modulator.
31. The receiver of
33. The receiver of
34. The receiver of
35. The receiver of
(1) a plurality of lasers each emitting light at a different frequency;
(2) an optical wavelength multiplexer for combining the light emitted by the plurality of lasers at an output thereof as a set of optical wavelengths; and
(3) an optical modulator arranged in a feedback loop and coupled to receive light at the output of the optical wavelength multiplexer, the feedback loop further including:
an optical tap for coupling at least a subset of said set of optical wavelengths to at least one optical output of the multi-wavelength photonic modulator;
at least one optical channel having an associated photodetector arranged to receive light from the optical tap via the at least one optical channel; and
an electronic loop portion coupled to receive output from the at least one associated photodetector and to provide an input for the optical modulator.
36. The multi-wavelength photonic oscillator of
37. The receiver of
38. The transmitter of
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/487,534 filed Jul. 14, 2003, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention was made with support from the United States Government under Contract No. F33615-00-C-1674 for an Agile Waveform Generation and Frequency Conversion. The U.S. Government has certain rights in the invention.
This invention provides a multi-wavelength photonic oscillator (MWPO) that generates a multi-wavelength optical waveform in which each wavelength is amplitude modulated with a common low noise RF tone or family of tones.
The invention extends the prior concepts of a multi-tone photonic oscillator and of a single-tone opto-electronic oscillator to multiple optical wavelengths. The prior approaches supply only a single optical wavelength. Using these prior approaches, a multiple wavelength output would require multiple oscillators, with each oscillator operating at a different optical wavelength. If those oscillators have RF tones of nominally the same frequency modulated onto the optical carrier, the RF signals produced at photodetectors connected to the outputs of those oscillators would have the same frequency. However, those RF signals would not have any phase coherence. There is a need for the generation of phase-coherent RF tones on optical carriers having different wavelengths.
Prior art photonic oscillators (also called opto-electronic oscillators) are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,723,856 and 5,777,778 by Yao and Maleki of JPL. The photonic oscillator of these prior inventions comprises an electro-optic modulator, a photodetector and a feedback loop that goes from the optical output of the modulator into the optical input of the photodetector, then electrically out of the photodetector and into the electrical drive input of the modulator; with the loop gain being greater than one. An optical source, such as a pump laser, supplies the light that goes into the modulator. Part of the light output from the modulator is diverted into the feedback loop.
A photonic oscillator that applies a multi-tone RF modulation on a single wavelength optical carrier without using a separate electronic RF oscillator is disclosed in PCT patent application Ser. No. PCT/US02/36849 filed Nov. 15, 2002 by HRL Laboratories, Yap and Sayyah entitled “Agile Spread Waveform Generator and Photonic Oscillator” which application is owned by the assignee of the present application.
These prior inventions do not make any assertions regarding the wavelength or wavelengths of light provided by the optical source. The optical wavelength of the light is not a characteristic that is a point of concern in these prior inventions and no mention is made of the wavelength. Also, no distinction is made between the wavelength or wavelengths of the light that is diverted into the loop compared to those not diverted into the feedback loop. What is considered important in these prior inventions, instead, is the optical power of that light, which, if sufficiently high, can supply the necessary energy to sustain the oscillation.
These prior photonic oscillators do not specifically produce optical outputs that have multiple wavelengths nor are their output wavelengths necessarily suitable for distribution of the light by a WDM network. The multi-wavelength capability of the present invention is one feature that is of benefit to the art.
Digital beam forming is being developed for phased array antennas that have multiple beams. Typically, a different digital beam forming signal is generated for each antenna element. This signal can contain the data to be transmitted and also the phase information for forming the antenna beam. This signal is then frequency-converted to the desired RF carrier and supplied to the antenna element. As illustrated in
In one aspect, the present invention involves the supply of multiple optical wavelengths into the optical modulator of a photonic oscillator combined with the use of a subset of those optical wavelengths (as the control wavelengths) in an opto-electronic feedback loop of the oscillator. The optical modulator applies a single or multi-tone RF modulation onto the multiple optical wavelengths. In a first embodiment, light at a control wavelength is diverted into a feedback loop, while light at the other wavelengths does not go through the feedback loop and is supplied as the output of the photonic oscillator.
An optical wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) network can then distribute this light to multiple photodetectors associated with antenna elements, with one or more wavelengths reaching each such photodetector. The desired phase-coherent RF signals are obtained at the terminal photodetectors. The feedback loop comprises one or more optical delay paths and various combinations of optical and electronic gain elements (amplifiers), optical and electronic filters, optical and electronic phase shifters, and photodetectors.
The effect of the feedback loop is to delay the RF modulated optical signal at a control wavelength, convert that signal into a RF electrical signal and use that delayed electrical signal to drive the optical modulator. When the gain of the feedback loop is greater than one, oscillation occurs. In contrast to the prior approaches, this RF feedback signal modulates light at multiple optical wavelengths. The time delays from the various paths of the feedback loop determine the frequency or frequencies of the modulation. The filters in the loop determine the number of modulation frequencies or tones. The RF modulations on the various optical wavelengths are coherent because the same optical modulator (which is a part of the feedback loop) produces those modulations. As will be seen, the various wavelengths of light do not all have to go through the feedback loop. The multi-wavelength light is preferably supplied by multiple single-wavelength lasers. It also could be supplied by one or more multi-wavelength laser sources. The design of the light source may not be particularly important for certain embodiments of this invention. But, for other embodiments, the design of the light source may well be important particularly if unwanted cross modulation products, which can be generated by the loop photodetectors, are to be avoided.
In one aspect, the present invention provides for photonically generating a RF oscillation that does not require a separate electronic RF oscillator and that also produces such oscillation as modulation sidebands on multiple optical carriers of different wavelengths. There is a prior HRL invention disclosure that discusses application of the same set of RF modulation sidebands (produced by driving an optical modulator with the output of an electronic RF oscillator) on multiple optical carriers of different wavelengths (see PCT application PCT/US02/36845 filed Nov. 15, 2002 by HRL Laboratories and Yap, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference). The disadvantage of this prior approach is its need for a separate electronic oscillator, which can be costly if low phase noise is required.
A preferred embodiment of a multi-wavelength photonic oscillator (MWPO) 100 in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in
The delay time of each path determines a set of RF oscillation frequencies that can be modulated onto the light by the optical modulator 106. The longer path defines relatively narrow-spaced frequency sidebands 134 (see
If the length of the longer delay line 122 has a controlled value and is of a relatively long length (typically comprising 1000s of meters of optical fiber), the MWPO 100 can produce multiple RF tones 134′ at a photodetector 220 connected to its output port 121 and the spacing between those tones 134′, which is determined by the delay time associated with the longer delay line 122, will be much shorter than the spacing between the RF tones 132′.
If the length of the shorter path 120a is very short, typically comprising less than 2 meters of optical fiber, the MWPO can produce a single RF tone at photodetector 220 connected to its output port. In this case, the oscillator loop of the MWPO functions in a manner similar to the loops described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,777,778.
If the length of the shorter loop has a controlled value and is of moderate length (typically comprising 4-100 meters of optical fiber), the MWPO 100 can produce multiple RF tones 132 at photodetector 220 connected to its output port 121. The spacing between those tones 132 as determined by the delay time associated with the shorter delay line 122 is smaller than in the preceding case. In this case, the oscillator loops of the MWPO 100 function in a manner similar to the loops described in the aforementioned PCT application Serial No. PCT/US02/36849 filed Nov. 15, 2002 by HRL Laboratories, Daniel Yap and Kayvan Sayyah.
In general the laser wavelengths (e.g., λA, λB, λC, λD) output from the MWPO 100 are selected to match the wavelengths of the channels in a WDM network (see
A feature of this embodiment is that the optical powers at the wavelengths λA, λB, λC, λD can be selected to suit the intended use of the light at those wavelengths.
For example, if that light is used to provide a master oscillator signal for injection locking a pair of slave lasers, the intensity at a given wavelength can be chosen to achieve a desired injection locking bandwidth or phase noise. The optical power at the wavelength λCNTL is preferably selected to achieve low phase noise for the MWPO tones.
The phase noise of a photonic oscillator and its dependence on parameters such as optical power has been analyzed by various authors (e.g., by Yao and Maleki in J. Opt. Soc. Am. B, vol. 13, no. 8, pp. 1725-1735; and by Sayyah and Yap in SPIE Proc., vol. 4490, pp. 52-62).
Another embodiment of the MWPO 100 is illustrated in
The main distinction between the two embodiments of
The reason that this second embodiment is less preferred than the first embodiment is the increased constraints this embodiment places on the wavelengths and powers of the lasers 102. Otherwise, both embodiments should provide suitable signals for the various applications described herein.
In the case of the first embodiment, the only restriction placed on the lasers LA-LD that supply the light wavelengths that are output from the MWPO 100, but are not coupled into the feedback loop 120, is that their output wavelengths can be combined with the WM 104 shown in
If the sidebands of one carrier frequency 130 were to overlap the sidebands of another carrier frequency, then in the case of the embodiment of
One exemplary application of the MWPO 100 is for phase locking various pairs of laser diodes 204 by an optical-injection locking process, as illustrated in
The various output wavelengths of the MWPO 100 are separated by a wavelength demultiplexer (WDDM) 202. Each wavelength is fed to a different pair of slave lasers 204. For each slave laser 204 pair, one slave laser is set so that its free-running wavelength matches the carrier frequency or a modulation sideband in the optical signal supplied to it from the MWPO 100. The other slave laser is typically set so that its free-running wavelength matches a different modulation sideband (or, alternatively, the carrier frequency). Use of amplitude modulation sidebands to optically injection lock a laser is well known and therefore not described in greater detail here. Use of a pair of lasers to generate an optical heterodyne output suitable for generating a RF LO signal also is well known and therefore also is not described in detail here.
Different beam forming information or data could be modulated onto the optical heterodyne output produced by each pair of slave lasers 204 by optical modulators 206. This information or data could be supplied by a CPU 210 and drive electronics 212 to drive an optical modulator (MOD) 206 that follows each pair of slave lasers 204. The outputs of the optical modulators 206 can then be multiplexed together (using an optical wavelength multiplexer, WM 208) and then carried on a single optical fiber 214 to the antenna subarray location 216. At the subarray location 216, a second WDDM 218 divides the various optical signals according to their wavelengths. Each wavelength is then directed to a different antenna element 216A . . . 216C of that subarray via an associated photodetector-amplifier circuit 220A . . . 220C, 222A . . . 222C.
Turning now to
It should be recalled that it has already been mentioned that the wavelengths outputted by a MWPO 100 can be associated with various optical WDM channels in a digital beam forming signal distribution system and, as mentioned with reference to
The frequency up-converted RF signals obtained at photodetectors 2201-220n are amplified, preferably by a Solid State Power Amplifier (SSPA) and filter elements 2221-222n associated with each antenna 2161-216n. The transmit antenna elements 2161-216n and the receive antenna elements 3161-316n may be shared or closely located and those skilled in the art will appreciate that, in that event, the filters in elements 2221-222n would typically include circulators to help isolate the receive circuits from the transmit circuits.
The use of the MWPO 100 permits a single MWPO 100 to be used for each subarray, or even for multiple subarrays. No electronic RF oscillator is needed for generating the LO signal. Also, an optical fiber WM/WDDM network can be used instead of electrical cables and electronic switch network to interconnect the processor with the antenna. Prior approaches for digital beam forming place electronic processors at each antenna element that generate the beam-forming information (and possibly also the data) for that element. Thus, the power supply and dissipation requirements and the weight at the antenna elements would be increased substantially compared to the embodiment of
The digital beam forming apparatus of
With respect to the receiving function of the antenna, the optical local oscillator signals, one each supplied from each pair of single wavelength lasers 204, are directed to a group of optical modulators 3201-320n. Each modulator 3201-320n of this group receives light of a different wavelength, that light also containing information on the local oscillator frequency. Each of the modulators 3201-320n modulates onto the light it receives the RF signal received by the antenna element 3161-316n associated with that modulator. Light from the multiple modulators 3201-320n is multiplexed together by a multiplexer 318 and thence carried by optical filters to a wavelength division demultiplexer (WDDM) 308 and then separately directed to optical photodetectors 306. The frequency down-converted intermediate frequency (IF) or baseband signals are then produced by these photodetectors 306. The time delays for photonic beamforming can be achieved by placing elements of
Having described this invention in connection with a number of embodiments, modification will now certainly suggest itself to those skilled in the art. As such, the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments except as required by the appended claims.
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